Coffee - Philosophy for Everyone Grounds for Debate

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Offering philosophical insights into the popular morning brew, Coffee -- Philosophy for Everyone kick starts the day with an entertaining but critical discussion of the ethics, aesthetics, metaphysics, and culture of coffee. Matt Lounsbury of pioneering business Stumptown Coffee discusses just how good coffee can beCaffeine-related chapters cover the ethics of the coffee trade, the metaphysics of coffee and the centrality of the coffee house to the public sphereIncludes a foreword by Donald Schoenholt, President at Gillies Coffee Company

Scott F. Parker has contributed chapters to Ultimate Lost and Philosophy, Football and Philosophy, Alice in Wonderland and Philosophy, Golf and Philosophy, and iPod and Philosophy. He is a regular contributor to Rain Taxi Review of Books. His writing has also appeared in Philosophy Now, Sport Literate, Fiction Writers Review, Epiphany, The Ink-Filled Page, and Oregon Humanities. Michael W. Austin is an Associate Professor of Philosophy at Eastern Kentucky University, where he works primarily in ethics. He has published Conceptions of Parenthood: Ethics and the Family (2007), Running and Philosophy: A Marathon for the Mind (Wiley-Blackwell, 2007), and Football and Philosophy: Going Deep (2008).

Foreword

p. xiii

Editors' Introduction

p. 1

The First Cup: Coffee and Metaphysics

p. 7

Coffee: Black Puddle Water or Panacea?

p. 9

The Necessary Ground of Being

p. 25

The Unexamined Cup Is Not Worth Drinking

p. 34

Samsara in a Coffee Cup: Self, Suffering, and the Karma of Waking Up

p. 46

The Existential Ground of True Community: Coffee and Otherness

p. 59

Grounds for Debate: Coffee Culture

p. 71

Sage Advice from Ben's Mom, or: The Value of the Coffeehouse

p. 73

The Coffeehouse as a Public Sphere: Brewing Social Change

p. 89

Café Noir: Anxiety, Existence, and the Coffeehouse

p. 100

The Philosopher's Brew

p. 113

The Wonderful Aroma of Bean: Coffee Aesthetics

p. 125

Three Cups: The Anatomy of a Wasted Afternoon

p. 127

Is Starbucks Really Better than Red Brand X?

p. 138

The Flavor of Choice: Neoliberalism and the Espresso Aesthetic

p. 152

Starbucks and the Third Wave

p. 166

How Good the Coffee Can Be: An Interview with Stumptown's Matt Lounsbury